254 Mass. 218 | Mass. | 1926
In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover $4,500, alleged to be due him by virtue of an assign
The plaintiff, a dealer in masons’ and plasterers’ supplies, furnished Walsh with material for use in the building to the amount of $18,213.55, which sum, together with other amounts, was due and payable July 1, 1923. At this time the total amount earned by Walsh was about $80,000 on his main contract and about $10,000 on extras, five per cent of which, or about $4,500, the defendants were entitled to hold in reserve until forty-five days after the completion of the Walsh contract. The plaintiff, on July 10, 1923, brought an action against Walsh, summoning the defendants as trustees. The defendants’ refusal to pay any money to Walsh until the trustee process should be discharged, and the desire of Walsh to have the case disposed of so that he could go on with his contract, led to a conference of the interested parties on July 16, 1923, which resulted in the execution of the assignment and acceptance hereinafter set forth, the discontinuance of the action, the payment by the defendants to Walsh of the balance due under his contract for June, and the resumption by him of work on the building.
The assignment to the plaintiff was in the following terms: “Know all Men by These Presents that I, Edward D. Walsh of Boston in the County of Suffolk and Commonwealth of Massachusetts for good consideration do hereby set over, transfer and assign to J. P. O’Connell of said Boston, doing business under the style of J. P. O’Connell & Company, the sum of Forty-five Hundred (4500) Dollars of moneys due and to become due to me from William H.
On July 20, Walsh delivered to the defendants’ attorney written notice of abandonment of his contract, leaving them to their remedies. The work which Walsh had agreed to do was thereafter prosecuted to completion by the defendants without the intervention of any subcontractor. The cost of finishing this work exceeded the balance of the contract price plus the amount of the reserve fund of $4,500. All money due the defendants from the owners under the general contract has been paid. More than forty-five days after all the plastering and similar work on the building was finished, the plaintiff made formal demand upon the defendants for payment of $4,500, alleged to be due under the assignment and acceptance. Upon the defendants’ denial of liability and refusal to pay, this action was brought. The case was heard in the Superior Court by a judge without a jury, who, after refusing to rule as requested by defendants that, on all the evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to
The contention of the plaintiff is that the Walsh contract was completed by the defendants, and after the lapse of forty-five days their liability to the plaintiff for $4,500 became fixed. The defendants’ contention is that the Walsh contract was never completed and they owe the plaintiff nothing. The work to be done under the subcontract of Walsh was the same as that required to be done by the defendants as a part of their general contract; and one of the terms of the Walsh contract made provision for the completion of the work by the defendants in case of failure on Walsh’s part‘to perform his agreement, with further provision for the deduction of the cost of that undertaking from the amount which otherwise might be due to Walsh; and Walsh also agreed to pay all damages, if any, for breach of contract by him. In finishing the work after Walsh abandoned his contract, the defendants were fulfilling their obligations under their contract with the owner, and not completing a contract which Walsh had terminated by abandonment. The references to the completion of the Walsh contract, in the correspondence between the plaintiff and the defendants, cannot change the plain meaning of the terms of the agreement. The defendants were finishing the work Walsh had agreed to do for them. The parties, in referring to the completion of the contract in the acceptance, contemplated that it would be performed by Walsh or somebody in his behalf who would be bound by the obligation of that contract. They could not have intended that if Walsh should abandon the contract it would be completed as a contract by the defendants in case they did the work which Walsh should have done.
The assignment to the plaintiff by Walsh was of moneys due and to become due to him from the defendants, and in the terms of the acceptance the sum of $4,500 was payable out of the final payment due to Walsh forty-five days after the completion of his written contract. As it was terminated by Walsh without the defendants’ fault, the time for making that payment never arrived.
The finding for the plaintiff was not warranted, and in accordance with the terms of the report judgment is to be entered for the defendants.
So ordered.